This class is meant only to be used by an implementor, meaning users of your functions/classes/modules should always interact with the associated promise object, but you (as the implementor) should use this class. Think of this as the engine that drives the promises and the promises as the steering wheels that control the direction taken.

This will return the status of the asynchronous operation, which will be either 'in progress', 'resolved' or 'rejected'. These three strings are also constants in this package (IN_PROGRESS, RESOLVED and REJECTED respectively), which can be used to check these values.

This method is used to register two callbacks, both of which are optional. The first $callback will be called on success and it will be passed all the values that were sent to the corresponding call to resolve. The second, $error will be called on error, and will be passed all the values that were sent to the corresponding reject. It should be noted that this method will always return a new Promises::Promise instance so that you can chain things if you like.

The success and error callbacks are wrapped in an eval block, so you can safely call die() within a callback to signal an error without killing your application. If an exception is caught, the next link in the chain will be reject'ed and receive the exception in @_.

If this is the last link in the chain, and there is no $error callback, the error will be swallowed silently. You can still find it by checking the result method, but no action will be taken. If this is not the last link in the chain, and no $error is specified, we will attempt to bubble the error to the next link in the chain. This allows error handling to be consolidated at the point in the chain where it makes the most sense.

This method is used to register two callbacks, the first $callback will be called on success and it will be passed all the values that were sent to the corresponding call to resolve. The second, $error is optional and will be called on error, and will be passed the all the values that were sent to the corresponding reject.

Unlike the then() method, done() returns an empty list specifically to break the chain and to avoid deep recursion. See the explanation in Promises::Cookbook::Recursion.

Also unlike the then() method, done() callbacks are not wrapped in an eval block, so calling die() is not safe. What will happen if a done callback calls die() depends on which event loop you are running: the pure Perl AnyEvent::Loop will throw an exception, while EV and Mojo::IOLoop will warn and continue running.

This method is like the finally keyword in a try/catch block. It will execute regardless of whether the promise has been resolved or rejected. Typically it is used to clean up resources, like closing open files etc. It returns a Promises::Promise and so can be chained. The return value is discarded and the success or failure of the finally callback will have no effect on promises further down the chain.

This is the method to call upon the successful completion of your asynchronous operation, meaning typically you would call this within the callback that you gave to the asynchronous function/method. It takes an arbitrary list of arguments and captures them as the result of this promise (so obviously they can be retrieved with the result method).

This is the method to call when an error occurs during your asynchronous operation, meaning typically you would call this within the callback that you gave to the asynchronous function/method. It takes an arbitrary list of arguments and captures them as the result of this promise (so obviously they can be retrieved with the result method).